Read Game Change: A Nina Bannister Mystery (The Nina Bannister Mysteries Book 3) Online
Authors: T'Gracie Reese,Joe Reese
Bullet pass under the basket!
Alyssha! All alone! Uncontested layup!
Inbound Pass by Donaldsonville—
Stolen ball?
What was the call?
Bay St. Lucy ball!
Long pass—
Haley open from the three-point line, then a long, arching shot, soft, soft—
SWISH!
THREE POINTS!
Bay St. Lucy five, Donaldsonville nothing!
One minute into the game…
…two minutes into the game…
Haley off to Alyssha over to—nope, ball stolen by the tall red-haired girl from Donaldsonville down court to the slender girl with glowing ebony skin over to the feisty blonde who was built like a fire plug and who hurtled over everything in her path then her pass re-stolen by Sarah across to Sonia and then—OH NO BAD PASS knocked away by tall Hispanic girl with ponytail taken by fireplug girl—my god, she’s everywhere—down court to red head over to frizz hair number thirty two—who’d just checked into the ball game—and bounce pass to ponytail back to frizz over to taller-than-anybody-on-our-team, then back to fireplug—
––and two points.
Then things began to go badly.
The weave worked imperfectly. The Mariners seemed to stop communicating effectively. They began yelling at each other:
“Take her! Take thirty two!”
“No, I’ve got 54!”
“They’re zoning, don’t you see that?”
“They’re not, it’s man to man!”
“I’m open!”
“Get out of the middle!”
“Post her up, post her up!”
“Switch! Switch!”
“Double down, now!”
Two minutes left in the first quarter; Donaldsonville 15, Mariners 9.
And then:
Alyssha Bennett dribbled hard to the right, slipped it behind the back to Sarah Gray barreling left over the top of the key and she ran SMACK into Sonia Ramirez and they fell down like two sacks of wet cement.
“OhmyGod!” screamed the whole bench.
And Nina found herself out on the floor, kneeling inside a circle of players, all of them looking down at Alyssha and Sonia, who, dazed, were sitting on their knees.
“Are you two ok?” she asked the girls.
They nodded, woozily.
“I think so.”
“I think so.”
“What happened?”
Alyssha pursed her lips and said:
“They were going 2-1-2. We had to adjust, and…”
Sonia shook her head:
“It wasn’t 2-1-2, Leesh! They had switched back to 1-3-1, didn’t you catch that? The middle was completely closed!”
“They don’t play 1-3-1! They never use that! It’s a disguised 2-1-2 with number 54 back in the paint to clog things up!”
“No, no, she was doubling down on the baseline!”
Sarah Gray:
“Guys, it’s man to man! They’re just softening it, don’t you see that?”
The two girls got to their feet and made their way to the sideline, replaced by two bench players, while Nina found herself thinking:
They don’t know what the hell is going on out there.
Which was, of course, unfortunate, given the fact that she didn’t either.
And that was the way it went for the rest of the game, except it got worse.
Shots that usually went in for the Lady Mariners clanged off the rim, or, worse, were partially blocked.
There was no open space on the court in which to maneuver.
Every patch of floor that should have been used as a jump shot’s launching pad was, impossibly, occupied by two beefy young women in yellow jerseys, snarling and snatching the ball away.
Halftime score: Donaldsonville 32—Bay St. Lucy 17.
“...and victory is an illusion of philosophers and fools.”
––
William Faulkner
There was nothing to say at halftime—or rather, there was probably a lot to say and Nina didn’t know what it was.
The Lady Mariners spent their fifteen minute break doing unladylike things, such as banging their balled up fists into the locker room and screaming into each other’s faces:
“CAN’T YOU SEE I’M OPEN! I’VE BEEN OPEN THE WHOLE HALF!”
“NOBODY’S OPEN! WHAT THE HELL KIND OF A DEFENSE ARE THEY RUNNING!”
“IT’S A MATCH UP ZONE, DON’T YOU SEE THAT, DOESN’T ANYBODY SEE THAT?”
“IT’S NOT A ZONE AT ALL, THAT’S THE PROBLEM!”
And then, of course, there was the inevitable realization that the game was being lost for the same reason that all athletic events are lost, and that, when one thought long and hard about it, all potential joy, success, and happiness in life itself were lost:
“THESE REFEREES ARE CHEATING!”
“THESE ARE THE WORST DAMN REFEREES I’VE EVER SEEN!”
“THIS GAME NEEDS TO BE PLAYED UNDER PROTEST!”
It was not played under protest, of course, nor would any subsequent in depth investigation reveal a cunningly concealed plot among the two officials—one a hardware store owner from Cape Hatteras and the other an insurance agent from Sedonia—among these two men, the school administration of Donaldsonville, The Warren Commission, and the Cuban government.
There was no such plot.
There were just twenty more minutes of ugly and sordid basketball on court, accompanied off court by blaring pep band fanfares and delirious cheers from the home side of the gymnasium, and complete silence from the other side, unless one counted Jackson Bennett, who stood for most of the time bellowing alternatively the
C
word, the
R
word, the
E
word, the
H
word, the
S
word, the
P
word, and other words, so loudly that he would have been thrown bodily out of the building, had he been less than six foot five in height, and lighter than two hundred and eighty pounds in weight.
So that he got to stay.
But it wasn’t much fun.
Not for anyone connected to Bay St. Lucy Basketball.
Final score: Donaldsonville 64-Bay St. Lucy 41.
And it wasn’t really as close as the score made it seem.
The events following the game resembled the events following any well run funeral. Some tears, a few mutual assurances that it was all for the best and was part of a plan that we do not understand now but will at a later date, the packing of any food that remained uneaten, and everybody finally going home.
By ten o’clock they were all on the bus.
Nina had shaken hands again with Paul Johnson, of course, and had congratulated him on his victory.
“Your girls played great tonight, Coach Johnson.”
“Well, we got lucky. Your bunch never quit; they kept fighting.”
Da da da da and so on and so on.
She was last onto the darkened, sepulchral bus.
The players lay motionless and silent across their seats, decorating them as angels decorate tombstones.
She got into her seat.
Her travel bag lay at her feet.
She looked out of the bus.
She burned within.
Somehow, deep down, she realized this was her own fault.
Her team had been outcoached.
That big fat jackass from Donaldsonville had outsmarted her.
Well, it would not happen again.
She put her nose ball against the cold bus window, and squinted out into the night.
The sky was on fire. Atlanta was burning.
She had no head phones, but the music was playing quite clearly in her head:
Ta taaa ta ta…”
Tara’s theme.
All the city was ablaze around her, but…
“Tomorrow,” she whispered, “is another day.”
Tara might be in blazes, but…
Ta taa ta ta…”
“I’ll
never
be beaten again!”
She turned on the small reading light overhead.
Then she reached into her bag, pulled out the playbook, and began reading it.
“Read, read, read. Read everything––trash, classics, good and bad, and see how they do it.”
“When it's a matter of not-do, I reckon a man can trust himself for advice. But when it comes to a matter of doing, I reckon a fellow had better listen to all the advice he can get.”
––
William Faulkner
,
Light in August
The following morning—Saturday—she rose, ate breakfast, went back to bed, curled up, and continued to read the playbook.
She finished the playbook at nine thirty, then began re-reading it.
She finished a second reading at eleven, then took out her notebook and re-drew the playbook until she knew every diagram by heart.
She finished this task at one PM, when she had a salami sandwich for lunch. She also fed Furl and changed his litter.
At two o’clock, she went to the Bay City Public Library and affixed herself to one of its computers.
A short time later, she approached the main desk, carrying one book
(You Haven’t Taught Until They have Learned: John Wooden’s Teaching Principals and Practices
), and a list of ten others, which she requested to be ordered as quickly as possible, this being an emergency situation. The list included:
Dan Meyer, Basketball the Dan Meyer Way;
(by, obviously, Dan Meyer, who, according to the computer, was a coaching legend);
The Game of Basketball: Basketball Fundamentals, Intangibles, and Finer Points for Coaches, Players, and Fans
by Kevin Sivils;
Basketball Skills and Drills, 3
rd
Edition
by Jerry Krause;
The Complete Handbook of Rebounding Fundamentals
by Swen Nater;
The Physics of Basketball
by Joseph Fontanella and
My Philosophy of Basketball
by Bobby Knight.
For the next four days she immersed herself in these books.